Friday, 2 November 2012

Military, police worsening Boko Haram insurgency : — Amnesty

 by Adelanwa Bamgboye, Boco Edet & Ronald Mutum (Abuja) & Hamza Idris (Maiduguri)  

Share . Report: Innocent people killed, raped, tortured. Report is biased, mischievous — Defence HQ
. Sect offers conditional ceasefire
Human rights abuses including extra-judicial killings, rape and torture committed by security forces in their fight against Boko Haram are spurring the very uprising they are meant to contain, Amnesty International said in Abuja yesterday.
In a report titled ‘Nigeria: Trapped in the cycle of violence’ released to journalists, the London-based rights group accused the Military and Police personnel of showing “little regard for the rule of law or human rights” in their operations.
The 76-page report detailed how hundreds of people accused of having links with Boko Haram have been arbitrarily detained, and others who did not pose any threat summarily executed outside their homes.
“Every injustice carried out in the name of security only fuels more terrorism, creating a vicious circle of murder and destruction,” said Amnesty’s secretary general Salil Shetty while unveiling the report in Abuja yesterday.
“You cannot protect people by abusing human rights and you cannot achieve security by creating insecurity,” he added.
But the Defence Headquarters in Abuja dismissed the report as “biased and mischievous,” while the Police said credibility of the report was doubtful because it quoted anonymous witnesses.
The Amnesty secretary general said the group’s experience of chronicling acts of terrorism in other countries showed that adopting the use of force to counter violence never worked and Nigeria needed to change its approach.
“Violating human rights in order to improve human condition might work in the short term but would backfire eventually. The only way to counter terrorism is with justice within the human rights framework,” Shetty said.
He said Amnesty received “mixed” reactions from government officials in meetings before the report was issued.
“The most important and positive reaction came from the office of NSA (National Security Adviser) and very encouragingly they have informed that they would investigate the cases we have identified and come out with a response,” he said.
But he added that many government officials have denied the existence of these abuses and “that is a bit more worrying because it is very important that early action is taken.”
‘Say your last prayer’
The Amnesty report detailed incidents of human rights abuses in Boko Haram-prone areas, relying on accounts of anonymous witnesses. It said it had sent a delegation to Kano and Borno between February and July to investigate reported atrocities.
“Amnesty International received consistent accounts of witnesses who saw people summarily executed outside their homes, shot dead during operations, after arrest, or beaten to death in detention or in the street by security forces in Maiduguri,” the report said.
It added that a “significant number” of people accused of links with Boko Haram were extra judicially killed, while hundreds were detained without charge or trial and many of those arrested disappeared or were later found dead.
“People are living in a climate of fear and insecurity, vulnerable to attack from Boko Haram and facing human rights violations at the hands of the very state security forces which should be protecting them,” Shetty said.
Amnesty said it had spoken to witnesses who described seeing people who were unarmed and lying down with their hands over their heads shot at close range by soldiers.
In one case, a widow described how soldiers put a gun against her husband’s head three times and told him to say his last prayers before shooting him dead. They then burned down their home. She now fends for her seven children alone.
Cycle of violence
Amnesty estimates that more than 200 suspected Boko Haram members are being held at a barracks in Maiduguri, while more than 100 others are being held at a police station in Abuja. Dozens of others probably are being held at the headquarters of the State Security Service, and others elsewhere, it said.
Those held largely do not know where they are detained, cannot contact their families or speak to lawyers, in contravention of the law, Amnesty said. Many are shackled together for nearly the entire day, the report said. Those held at the police station in Abuja are kept in a former slaughterhouse where chains still hang from the ceiling, the rights group said.
“There were shots in the night. I was hearing the shot of guns but I didn’t know what they are doing,” said one former detainee at the police station quoted in the Amnesty report. “When (the police) were collecting statements, some of us cannot speak English, and some of the officers cannot speak our language, so those that have difficulty, they have been beaten ... Our lives were — we were not alive. We had no food, no water and no bath.”
In the report, Amnesty said it requested to see prisons, police stations, military detention centers and holding cells of the SSS but did not get access to the facilities.
Amnesty said Boko Haram’s relentless targeting of civilians “may constitute crimes against humanity,” but urged Nigeria “to take responsibility for its own failings” in combatting the insurgents.
“The cycle of attack and counter-attack has been marked by unlawful violence on both sides, with devastating consequences for the human rights of those trapped in the middle,” Shetty said.
‘Biased and mischievous’
The Defence Headquarters, the Nigeria Police Force and the Joint Task Force operating in Maiduguri yesterday dismissed the allegations of human rights abuses by Amnesty.
JTF spokesman Lt.-Colonel Sagir Musa said in an emailed response to Daily Trust: “The report is not fundamentally different from the one of Thursday 11 October, 2012—the same allegations. JTF has severally debunked the allegations.
“For the sake of posterity, there is no established or recorded case of extra judicial killing, arson and arbitrary detention by the task force. Be that as it may, we will continue to look at local and international concerns about our operations. We will continue to investigate these allegations and if found to be true, we will legally and militarily punish offenders and where possible make our findings public.
“JTF don’t condone or encourage infractions/indiscipline and where that happens we immediately visit sanctions accordingly. That accounted for the successes we have so far recorded.”
For his part, spokesman for the Police Force, CSP Frank Mba, said, “The fact that most of the sources of the content of the report are not named (and thus not open to confirmation or reconciliation) puts the authenticity, credibility and legitimacy of the report in question.”
In a statement in Abuja yesterday, Mba added: “As a responsible law enforcement agency, the Nigeria Police Force takes all criticisms against its organisation seriously.
“Consequently, the Police authority has begun a comprehensive and critical study of the report with a view to establishing its veracity and relevance vis-à-vis our contemporary security challenges and needs.
“Bearing in mind that the Force has no monopoly of knowledge, the Police high command (on the strength of the report) will not hesitate to accept honest and factual recommendations (if any) contained therein and initiate appropriate reforms where necessary.”
Defense spokesman Colonel Mohammed Yerima said security forces only kill Boko Haram suspects during gunfights, never in executions.
“We don’t torture people. We interview a suspect, if he is not involved we let him go. If he is involved we hand him to the police,” he said, quoted by Reuters news agency. “I totally disagree with this report. It is biased and it is mischievous.”
Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Mohammed Bello Adoke could not be reached for comments yesterday. His spokesman Professor Akpe said he could not speak on the matter because he had not been authorised to do so.
DailyTrust

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